J. R. Macdonald Laboratory, Department of Physics, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas, USA.
Center for Free-Electron Laser Science, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY), Hamburg, Germany.
Nature. 2017 Jun 1;546(7656):129-132. doi: 10.1038/nature22373. Epub 2017 May 31.
X-ray free-electron lasers enable the investigation of the structure and dynamics of diverse systems, including atoms, molecules, nanocrystals and single bioparticles, under extreme conditions. Many imaging applications that target biological systems and complex materials use hard X-ray pulses with extremely high peak intensities (exceeding 10 watts per square centimetre). However, fundamental investigations have focused mainly on the individual response of atoms and small molecules using soft X-rays with much lower intensities. Studies with intense X-ray pulses have shown that irradiated atoms reach a very high degree of ionization, owing to multiphoton absorption, which in a heteronuclear molecular system occurs predominantly locally on a heavy atom (provided that the absorption cross-section of the heavy atom is considerably larger than those of its neighbours) and is followed by efficient redistribution of the induced charge. In serial femtosecond crystallography of biological objects-an application of X-ray free-electron lasers that greatly enhances our ability to determine protein structure-the ionization of heavy atoms increases the local radiation damage that is seen in the diffraction patterns of these objects and has been suggested as a way of phasing the diffraction data. On the basis of experiments using either soft or less-intense hard X-rays, it is thought that the induced charge and associated radiation damage of atoms in polyatomic molecules can be inferred from the charge that is induced in an isolated atom under otherwise comparable irradiation conditions. Here we show that the femtosecond response of small polyatomic molecules that contain one heavy atom to ultra-intense (with intensities approaching 10 watts per square centimetre), hard (with photon energies of 8.3 kiloelectronvolts) X-ray pulses is qualitatively different: our experimental and modelling results establish that, under these conditions, the ionization of a molecule is considerably enhanced compared to that of an individual heavy atom with the same absorption cross-section. This enhancement is driven by ultrafast charge transfer within the molecule, which refills the core holes that are created in the heavy atom, providing further targets for inner-shell ionization and resulting in the emission of more than 50 electrons during the X-ray pulse. Our results demonstrate that efficient modelling of X-ray-driven processes in complex systems at ultrahigh intensities is feasible.
X 射线自由电子激光使人们能够在极端条件下研究包括原子、分子、纳米晶体和单个生物颗粒在内的各种系统的结构和动力学。许多针对生物系统和复杂材料的成像应用都使用具有极高峰值强度(超过每平方厘米 10 瓦特)的硬 X 射线脉冲。然而,基础研究主要集中在使用强度低得多的软 X 射线研究单个原子和小分子的响应上。使用强 X 射线脉冲的研究表明,由于多光子吸收,辐照原子会达到非常高的电离程度,在杂核分子体系中,这种吸收主要发生在重原子上(只要重原子的吸收截面比其相邻原子的吸收截面大得多),并且随后会有效地重新分配诱导电荷。在生物客体的串行飞秒晶体学中(X 射线自由电子激光的一种应用,极大地提高了我们确定蛋白质结构的能力),重原子的电离增加了这些客体的衍射图案中可见的局部辐射损伤,并且已经被提议作为相位衍射线数据的一种方法。基于使用软 X 射线或强度较低的硬 X 射线的实验,人们认为,在其他方面可比的辐照条件下,在孤立原子中诱导的电荷以及与之相关的原子辐射损伤,可以从多原子分子中诱导的电荷推断出来。在这里,我们表明,包含一个重原子的小多原子分子对超强度(强度接近每平方厘米 10 瓦特)、硬(光子能量为 8.3 千电子伏特)X 射线脉冲的飞秒响应在定性上是不同的:我们的实验和建模结果表明,在这些条件下,与具有相同吸收截面的单个重原子相比,分子的电离程度大大增强。这种增强是由分子内超快电荷转移驱动的,它填充了在重原子中产生的芯孔,为内层电离提供了更多的目标,并导致在 X 射线脉冲期间发射超过 50 个电子。我们的结果表明,在超高强度下对复杂系统中的 X 射线驱动过程进行有效建模是可行的。